How I’m feeling as a biracial woman post-election

In the eye of the Trump Storm, a friend asked me, how do you find your center?

I told her, “I turn the lights off. Step in the shower. Hug my knees. And, I mouth P E A C E, one letter at a time.”

Since the election, I’ve been shower-praying more and more. News of violence litters my Facebook feed. Last night, I watched a video of a Trump Supporter hurling the word N*gger into the ether. This morning, I read a teacher’s report of Muslim children fearful that they are unwanted—hated—by half the country. And what can the teacher say? Can she tell these children in good faith—you have no reason to be afraid?

These names are a part of us. No one can say they didn’t see. We live in the seeing era. You can watch Michael beg for air. You can hear Trayvon’s murderer chase his victim. You can see Philando’s girlfriend scream. And yet, no justice.

Is this the dream Martin Luther King Jr. had in mind? Does one victory—a black man rising to the highest office—cancel out millions of losses?

We knew what was happening at Trump’s rallies. No one criminalized the racial slurs or the violent ejection of minorities. Instead, we laughed. We posted satirical commentary — because this shouldn’t be taken seriously. To take it seriously would mean not only seeing, but believing that our roads aren’t golden. That every little girl and every little boy is not judged by the content of their character. And now we have to tell our children the truth.

I spend a lot of time seeking quiet, nothingness, peace. This means I miss appointments; I run late; I let people down.

But why couldn’t you come? Where have you been? They ask.

In the days following Trump’s election, it has become acceptable to respond… “Because I’ve been weeping.”

It’s true that I have been. It’s also true that I cried in the weeks before the election, tormented by my racial ambiguity, weary of the what are you questions. It’s also true that I cried in the years preceding, every time my life as a biracial woman aligned more closely with the statistics of my less privileged heritage.

There is a line, more real than any wall, that encloses every human experience. Our lives are eternal dances, step by step, we edge closer to our invisible lines, to our partner’s internal music. We keep finding new ways to listen. We conduct surveillance. We ask questions. We live tweet our changing status. We record the last breath, the final plea. But somehow we see and hear each other less and less. How can this be?

The truth is I’ve never found my center. The truth is no matter what my DNA says, my pale skin has saved me again and again. As it has yours. And your neighbor’s. Just as black skin claimed Trayvon’s life. And yours. And your neighbor’s. Color matters. In ways some of us will never know and too many of us will always know.

The word “trump” means a card “chosen to rank above the others, which can win a trick.” Trump is President.

Now we must finally listen in ways we always should have. Not with screens, but with silence. Not to words, but to hearts.